Rising
temperatures

A rise in ocean temperatures is considered one of the most
harmful results of global warming. A warmer ocean could result in the loss
of many fish and coral, which are vital to the ocean's ecosystem. In 2007,
the surface temperature of the ocean was the highest it’s been in 30
years.

How much of the ocean is polluted?

Oceans—an important source of food
and recreation for humans—cover two-thirds of Earth's surface. The
Journal of Science published a report in their February 15, 2008, issue
about the effect of human pollution on
the ocean. According to the report, only 4% of the world’s oceans are
considered pristine—meaning they are
untouched by human contamination—and 40% are strongly affected by
pollution. Eventually, though, even the pristine oceans, which are in the Arctic, will be contaminated by human
pollution.

Oceans absorb 80% of greenhouse gases and 50% of the carbon
dioxide released into the atmosphere. Over the past 50 years, as carbon
dioxide emissions have increased, the ocean's temperature has steadily
risen. Some negative impacts of the temperature increase include the melting
of glaciers, higher sea levels, intensified storms, acidification of the ocean, and decreasing
populations of marine life

Oceans become more acidic

Billions of tons of carbon dioxide are emitted into the atmosphere each
year, mainly from deforestation and the
burning of fossil
fuels. Oceans absorb about a million tons of carbon dioxide per hour. In
its natural state the ocean is alkaline,
but with the absorption of too much carbon dioxide, it is becoming more acidic. Carbon
dioxide forms carbonic acid when it
dissolves in the water. With rising levels of carbon dioxide emissions, the
ocean cannot absorb enough to keep the delicate ecosystem unharmed.

A
warmer and a more acidic ocean will harm organisms at the bottom of the food chain first, such as coral and plankton, which will eventually harm the
entire food chain. Scientists predict that the Ph level of the ocean will fall half a
unit by 2100, making some areas of the world’s oceans, including the
Southern Ocean, uninhabitable for corals. In the last 30 years, 80%-90% of
coral cover in Caribbean reefs was
destroyed.

The vanishing polar icecap

The greatest damage
caused by warmer water can be seen in the Arctic. If the polar icecap continues to recede at its current
rate, the ocean level will rise 20 feet by 2050. Scientists took a
measurement of the icecap that the covers the North Pole in 1979. A 2007
measurement of the same icecap indicated it had receded 43% since 1979. Rising sea
levels threaten coastal land—potentially wiping out wetlands, wildlife habitats, and
destroying coastal property. Not only will melting icecaps in the Arctic
cause higher sea levels, but it will also harm the population of certain
animals such as polar bears, who use
the ice to hunt and reproduce. Due to the vanishing sea ice, polar bears were put under the protection of the Endangered Species Act on May 15, 2008.

Storms are predicted to intensify with
the warming of ocean water as well. Scientists have seen a greater number of
hurricanes at higher intensity
since the 1970s. Coastal land and communities especially in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean will
suffer from more severe storms.

What can be done to slow global
warming?

Global warming cannot be reversed, but in order to slow the
process, greenhouse gases have to be capped, energy consumption and the use
of alternative fossil fuels reduced, and deforestation must be curtailed.